The comparative and superlative degrees of clean are cleaner and cleanest.
cleaner, cleanest
The comparative and superlative degrees of "white" are formed in the standard way: "whiter" and "whitest" respectively.
warmer, warmest
i think its cleanest or more clean cleanest sounds more proper
"Dried" is the past and past participle of dry. As an adjective, the comparative and superlative forms of dry are drier and driest respectively.
out
Get is a verb and does not have comparative or superlative degrees.
Comparative and superlative degrees are for adjectives and adverbs. House can be used as a noun or a verb and does not have comparative or superlative forms.
Cleanest is the superlative degree of the word clean. Cleaner is the comparative degree
more clean, cleaner
They are cleaner and cleanest.
cleaner, cleanest
more in, most in
more out, most out
more in, most in
cleaner, cleanest
The three degrees (of comparison) for adjectives are Positive, Comparative and Superlative. Example: hard (positive) harder (comparative) hardest (superlative)